From: Jurriaan Bendien (adsl675281@TISCALI.NL)
Date: Fri Jun 29 2007 - 15:05:10 EDT
Hi Michael, Gyorgy Lukacs once wrote: "Orthodox Marxism, therefore, does not imply the uncritical acceptance of the results of Marx's investigations. It is not the 'belief' in this or that thesis, nor the exegesis of a 'sacred' book. On the contrary, orthodoxy refers exclusively to method." http://www.marxists.org/archive/lukacs/works/history/orthodox.htm But this argument is precisely flawed in my opinion. Why? Here are eight reasons: (1) True orthodoxy refers not to an aping of what a thinker said or did, but to following his/her known goals, intentions and purposes. (2) Any method must be appropriate to to the object of investigation to which it refers, as Gramsci mentioned, and is relevant with respect to that object. Any attempt to generalise a method from one object for which it was designed, to another object, usually requires at least an adjustment of the method. Indiscriminately using the same method for all problems usually leads to bad results. (3) We judge a method according to its results, and if the results are no good, we throw out the method, and try another one. The idea of sticking to one method for the sake of orthodoxy is mistaken, because if the method doesn't work, we should abandon it for another one. (4) The materialist interpretation of human history is not a method, but an approach, or at best a methodological guide (Marx uses the qualified term Leitfaden, meaning "guiding thread") which heuristically guides us in trying to explain phenomena. It tells us that behind an idea is a practice, and behind the practice is a material and social context. Marx & Engels themselves were scathing about academics who tried to knock up their insights into a quick philosophical system that explained everything, they regarded it as schematism, and indeed the old Engels warned that "the materialist interpretation of history has a lot of dangerous friends these days, who use it as an excuse for not studying history". (5) The striking thing about Lukacs's own work (and that of Lenin), particularly his early work, is precisely its originality and innovative nature, ie. its unorthodox application of Marx's insights in a new area, that of literature, culture and ideology. It is inapposite to present this as the height of orthodoxy, except insofar as it honours the goals of the founder of a research programme. Even so, can we really say that there is ever an "orthodox" interpretation of a work of fiction? (6) There simply exists no unanimity about what Marx's research methods were, leading to many different interpretations of his methods, and thus the insistence about orthodoxy raises the question of what we can be really orthodox about in this regard, anyway. (7) Marx did not simply use one method, he used all sorts of methods in different contexts, and his methods evolved over time, without ever settling into one cast-in-stone system. He often struggled a lot with the best way to write something, and laboriously rewrote things from a different angle. (8) In reality, Marx often wasn't so self-aware about his own methods, he simply did things, wrote things creatively, in the way he considered personally to be appropriate, and then only later tried to make things more systematic. When Marx had to sit down and write a book about his research in a way that workers could understand, Freiligath passed him an old copy of Hegel's Logic which inspired Marx's idea that in presenting his conclusions he would parody Hegel's system, and invert Hegel's dialectic to describe the dialectics of the movements of capital and its transformation of the world ("the formation of society and social relations by economic/material means"). But in fact the same research could have been written up in innumerable different ways, and if he had not been reminded of Hegel at this particular stage of his research, he might well have written up his conclusions in a different way, maybe more like he wrote A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. That work however failed to sell, and Marx evidently was keen to do things in a different way, that would be more persuasive. He prided himself for applying an original method which "hitherto has never yet been used in economic science". Of course, having said this, I do not deny that there are more and less accurate descriptions of Marx's intellectual method of working, that is obviously true, and in this sense there is obviously good and bad scholarship possible, given what we can establish in terms of evidence, inference and context. As regards abstraction, this is rooted in the processes of stimulus identification (selection), stimulus association, stimulus generalisation and stimulus discrimination, which living organisms are capable of to some or other degree, and which enables them to behave and respond with a degree of autonomy and freedom, by internally prioritising and ordering behavioural responses, and attaching a value to them, even if only an instinctive survival value. But the important thing about abstraction is what the abstraction is an abstraction "from", since you can abstract e.g. (1) from an empirical object, (2) from concepts, (3) from language and numbers, (4) from intuition or instinct. Marx's criticism of the Young Hegelians in part concerned precisely their mode of abstraction, i.e. that they worked on "mere thought material" in an idealist way, and juggled with concepts and language (linguistic apposition), without this being disciplined at all by practical experience, or with regard for the total context within which ideas emerged. This Marx considered "ideology", i.e. the true background or motivating forces behind thought were being obscured or denied. In this sense, Engels wrote that the ideologist "thinks consciously, but with a false consciousness" insofar as he is unaware of what is really behind his own ideation. Therefore, Engels said, the ideologist "speculatively imagines apparent motives" giving rise to the familiar onion-type layering of ideas in which one layer hides another layer beneath it. When Lennon wrote his pop song "looking through a glass onion" this could be interpreted to mean that, from a certain angle, it would be possible to see through the stratifications of a person's consciousness, even if, precisely because of that layering, the person himself was unaware of it and could not see it himself. In general, my opinion has been that human consciousness has phenomenologically the following six basic gradations: - sub-conscious awareness - conscious subjective awareness (dissociated, focusing inward on the inner world, or expressing an inner state outwards) - intersubjective or reflexive awareness (an awareness which occurs in association with other people, and is internal to that association) - objective awareness (dissociated, focusing outward to a world that exists mind-independently) - reality-transforming awareness (transitions in practical action reframing the boundaries of different forms of awareness and changing consciousness, or connecting different forms of awareness) - transcendent awareness (going beyond personal knowledge or experience - some would include intuition and spiritual insight under this heading). Now obviously the same applies to Marx himself - to say that he was at all times objectively aware, or aware in all these gradations simultaneously, would be to say he wasn't human but a God. But if so, then most probably he wasn't at all times aware even of his own method of working! Alfred Sohn-Rethel emphasized once that the market economy itself generated more and more new abstractive processes, insofar as more and more things were mediated by money relations that spanned the globe. But this also means that with the development of a cash economy and a complex division of labour, abstractive processes themselves undergo change and development, and in addition modern science makes possible levels of abstraction that simply were unavailable to Marx. We cannot really say that one abstractive procedure is better than another, except in relation to a practical task to which an abstractive procedure is being applied, and its purpose or goal. What we can say is that one abstractive procedure is likely to get a result, or unlikely to obtain one, in the light of experience. But that is more a philosophy of praxis, i.e. a set of rules of thumb or generalisations developed through reflecting on practical experience. The bad thing about orthodoxy in this sense is that it prevents people from thinking for themselves, i.e. using their own original thought processes to good effect, with the result that orthodoxy stifles creativity, rather than promote it. Orthodoxy is scientifically or morally only relevant in the sense of consistency, in the sense of consistently developing a theory, behaviour or method of working, but we can obviously be perfectly consistent without being orthodox as well. So the best we can say about orthodoxy, is that it is an "aid" to consistency. But that is to say, that it is just a means, not an end in itself - there simply is no rational point in being orthodox for its own sake. If this idea is accepted, then it is clear that in truth the pursuit of orthodoxy for its own sake is not rational, but has to do with aspects of human nature which may not be rationally explicable at all, such as faith, emotions, hope, and will. But in fact this orthodoxy for its own sake cannot even succeed by adherence to a method, since the complexity of life causes the violation of the method in practice, at every turn. It can succeed at best only in terms of the relentless pursuit of a goal. In this sense, Lenin for example was very orthodox, namely he sought relentlessly to promote revolution. Yet he was highly unorthodox in the methods which he used for this purpose, despite his claim that he was only doing what Marx said. Along come the Marxists who want to convert dead thinkers into icons of orthodoxy, but this overlooks precisely the discontinuities and changes in human lives. This is more a sort of idolatry which harms human spirituality, rather than enrich it. Jurriaan
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